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Introduction of Bills

No matter where a legislative proposal originates, it can be introduced only by a member of Congress.
In the Senate, a member may introduce any of several types of bills and resolutions by filing it with
the Office of the Secretary.

There is no limit to the number of bills a member may introduce. House and Senate bills may have
joint sponsorship and carry several members' names.

Major legislation is often introduced in both houses in the form of companion (identical) bills, the
purpose of which is to speed up the legislative process by encouraging both chambers to consider the
measure simultaneously. Sponsors of companion bills may also hope to dramatize the importance or
urgency of the issue and show broad support for the legislation.

Types of Legislation

The type of measures that Congress may consider and act upon (in addition to treaties in the Senate)
include bills and three kinds of resolutions. They are:

1. Bills

These are general measures, which if passed upon, may become laws. A bill is prefixed with S.,
followed by a number assigned the measure based on the order in which it is introduced. The vast
majority of legislative proposals––recommendations dealing with the economy, increasing penalties
for certain crimes, regulation on commerce and trade, etc., are drafted in the form of bills. They also
include budgetary appropriation of the government and many others. When passed by both chambers
in identical form and signed by the President or repassed by Congress over a presidential veto, they
become laws.

2. Joint Resolutions

A joint resolution, like a bill, requires the approval of both houses and the signature of the President.
It has the force and effect of a law if approved. There is no real difference between a bill and a joint
resolution. The latter generally is used when dealing with a single item or issue, such as a continuing
or emergency appropriations bill. Joint resolutions are also used for proposing amendments to the
Constitution.

3. Concurrent Resolutions

A concurrent resolution is usually designated in the Senate as S. Ct. Res. It is used for matters affecting
the operations of both houses and must be passed in the same form by both of them. However, they
are not referred to the President for his signature, and they do not have the force of law. Concurrent
resolutions are used to fix the time of adjournment of a Congress and to express the “sense of
Congress” on an issue.

4. Simple Resolutions
It is usually designated with P. S. Res. A simple resolution deals with matters entirely within the
prerogative of one house of Congress, such as adopting or receiving its own rules. A simple resolution
is not considered by the other chamber and is not sent to the President for his signature. Like a
concurrent resolution, it has no effect and force of a law. Simple resolutions are used occasionally to
express the opinion of a single house on a current issue. Oftentimes, it is also used to call for
congressional action on an issue affecting national interest.

Bill Referrals

Once a measure has been introduced and given a number, it is read and referred to an appropriate
committee. It must be noted that during the reading of the bill, only the title and the author is read on
the floor. The Senate President is responsible for referring bills introduced to appropriate committees.

The jurisdictions of the Standing Committees are spelled out in Rule X, Section 13 of the Rules of the
Senate. For example, if a bill involves matters relating to agriculture, food production and agri-
business, it must be referred to the Committee on Agriculture and Food.

In Committee

The standing committees of the Senate, operating as “little legislatures,” determine the fate of most
proposals. There are committee hearings scheduled to discuss the bills referred. Committee members
and staff frequently are experts in the subjects under their jurisdiction, and it is at the committee
stage that a bill comes under the sharpest scrutiny. If a measure is to be substantially revised, the
revision usually occurs at the committee level.

A committee may dispose of a bill in one of several ways: it may approve, or reject, the legislation
with or without amendments; rewrite the bill entirely; reject it, which essentially kills the bill; report it
favorably or without recommendation, which allows the chamber to consider the bill at all. It must be
noted that under Section 29, Rule XI of the Rules of the Senate, if the reports submitted are
unfavorable, they shall be transmitted to the archives of the Senate, unless five Senators shall, in the
following session, move for their inclusion in the Calendar for Ordinary Business, in which case the
President shall so order.

Committee Reports

A committee report describes the purpose and scope of the bill, explains any committee
amendments, indicates proposed changes in existing law and such other materials that are relevant.
Moreover, reports are numbered in the order in which they are filed and printed.
Calendaring for Floor Debates: Consideration of, and Debates on Bills

Under Section 45 of Rule XVI of the Rules of the Senate, the Senate shall have three calendars, to wit:

A “Calendar for Ordinary Business," in which shall be included the bills reported out by the
committees in the order in which they were received by the Office of the Secretary; the bills whose
consideration has been agreed upon by the Senate without setting the dates on which to effect it; and
also the bills whose consideration has been postponed indefinitely;

A “Calendar for Special Orders,” in which the bills and resolutions shall be arranged successively and
chronologically, according to the order in which they were assigned for consideration; and

A “Calendar for Third Reading,” in which shall be included all bills and joint resolutions approved on
second reading.

Thus, a bill which has a committee report can be referred to the “Calendar for Ordinary Business.” It
may again be moved to its “Special Order of Business” for priority action.

On the other hand, the consideration and debate of bills and resolutions are spelled out in Rule XXV,
Section 71 of the Rules of the Senate. It provides as follows:

Sec. 71. The Senate shall adopt the following procedure in the consideration of bills and joint
resolutions:

(a) Second reading of the bill.

(b) Sponsorship by the committee chairman, or by any member designated by the committee.

(c) If a debate ensues, turns for and against the bill shall be taken alternately: Provided, however, That
any committee member who fails to enter his objection or to make of record his dissenting vote after
it shall have been included in the Order of Business and read to the Senate in accordance with the
second paragraph of Section 24 hereof, shall not be allowed to speak against the bill during the period
of general debate although he may propose and speak or vote on amendments thereto.

(d) The sponsor of the bill or author of the motion shall have the right to close the debate.

(e) With the debate closed, the consideration of amendments, if any, shall be in order.

(f) After the period of amendments, the voting of the bill on Second Reading.

(g) Bills shall be submitted to final vote by yeas and nays after printed copies thereof in final form
have been distributed to the Members at least three (3) days prior to their passage, except when the
President of the Philippines certifies to the necessity of their immediate enactment to meet a public
calamity or emergency, in which case the voting on Third Reading may take place immediately after
second reading.

After the bill is approved on Third Reading, it will be submitted to the House of Representatives for
consideration. A bill passed by the Senate and transmitted to the House usually goes to a committee,
unless a House bill on the same subject has already been reported out by the appropriate committee
and placed on the calendar.
Under normal procedures, therefore, a bill passed by one chamber and transmitted to the other is
referred to the appropriate committee, from which it must follow the same route to passage as a bill
originating from that chamber.

Amendments may be offered at both the committee and floor action stages, and the bill as it emerges
from the second chamber may differ significantly from the version passed by the first. A frequently
used procedure when this occurs is for the chamber that acts last to bring up the other chamber’s bill
and substitute its own version, then retaining only the latter’s bill number. That numbered bill,
containing the Senate and House version, is then sent to a conference committee to resolve all
differences.

Conference Committee Action

Calling a Conference

Either chamber can request a conference once both have considered the same legislation. Generally,
the chamber that approved the legislation first will disagree to the amendments made by the second
body and will make a request that a conference be convened. Sometimes, however, the second body
will ask for a conference immediately after it has passed the legislation, assuming that the other
chamber will not accept its amendments.

Selection of Conferees

Under the Rules of the Senate (Rule XII, Section 34), the Senate President shall designate the
members of the Senate panel in the conference committee with the approval of the Senate. The
Senate delegation to a conference can range in size from three to a larger number, depending on the
length and complexity of the legislation involved.

Authority of Conferees

The authority given to the Senate conferees theoretically is limited to matters in disagreement
between the two chambers. They are not authorized to delete provisions or language agreed to by
both the House and the Senate as to draft entirely new provisions.

In practice, however, the conferees have wide latitude, except where the matters in disagreement are
very specific. Moreover, conferees attempt to reconcile their differences, but generally they try to
grant concession only insofar as they remain confident that the chamber they represent will accept
the compromise.

The Conference Report

When the conferees have reached agreement on a bill, the conference committee staff writes a
conference report indicating changes made in the bill and explaining each side’s actions.

Once a conference committee completes its works, it can now be submitted to the floor for its
approval. Debate on conference reports is highly privileged and can interrupt most other business.
Approval of the conference report by both houses, along with any amendments on disagreement,
constitutes final approval of the bill.

Final Legislative Action

After both houses have given final approval to a bill, a final copy of the bill, known as the “enrolled
bill,” shall be printed, and certified as correct by the Secretary of the Senate and the Secretary General
of the House of Representatives. After which, it will be signed by the Speaker of the House and the
Senate President.

A bill may become a law, even without the President’s signature, if the President does not sign a bill
within 30 days from receipt in his office. A bill may also become a law without the President’s
signature if Congress overrides a presidential veto by two-thirds vote.

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